Addressing the Operational Challenges for Outpatient Stroke Rehabilitation.

Am J Phys Med Rehabil

From the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland (LJ, PR); Rehabilitation Therapy Services, Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland (SG, EJ, GK); and Department of Neurology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland (PR).

Published: February 2023

The traditional model of rehabilitation services includes clear requirements for provision of services in the acute inpatient rehabilitation setting. However, there are fewer guidelines on the frequency and duration of rehabilitation services beyond the acute setting. Recent research has suggested that neurorehabilitation interventions that are provided frequently enough upon discharge from acute inpatient rehabilitation to facilitate repeated practice and feedback improve long-term stroke outcomes. However, it is challenging to provide high-frequency outpatient rehabilitation, as the logistics of scheduling and insurance limitations often do not allow it. The Sheikh Khalifa Stroke Institute at Johns Hopkins Medicine innovated a new model to provide the appropriate frequency of therapy for stroke rehabilitation in the outpatient setting. This article describes the restructured operational infrastructure for outpatient stroke rehabilitation to facilitate high-frequency transdisciplinary stroke rehabilitation in the real world, including the development of the outpatient postacute therapy programs and the identification of appropriate patients for each program, the development of scheduling matrices and treating teams to deliver the postacute therapy programs, the implementation of transdisciplinary neurorehabilitation, and the steps taken to empower patients to engage in rehabilitation at home and address barriers to accessing the programs. We assessed the effect of the operational restructuring on schedule utilization, no-show rates, and cancellation rates in the 3 mos before and after implementation of the program and show that it increased schedule utilization and reduced no-show rates and cancellation rates, suggesting that it may increase compliance with rehabilitation. It is possible to create the infrastructure needed to bridge the continuum of care for poststroke recovery and rehabilitation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/PHM.0000000000002145DOI Listing

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